Thanks, Robert. Great tool. Useful. My first guess is that it monitors your IRQs, so that you can recognize any conflicts. Once upon O' time, in Windows 3 days, I'd have trouble with IRQs conflicting between the laser printer and the external 9600 Baud modem.... yeah, that far back... and I had to install some tool that would let the modem grab a temporary total hold on the IRQ so that the printer could not poll the IRQ and mess up the modem transmissions.
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 12:33 PM, Robert Citek <[email protected]> wrote: > That's what I'm trying to figure out. The gist of what I've read so > far is that ... > > 1) low is good; high is bad > 2) there is no absolute threshold for when good turns bad; you need to > establish a baseline > > I have yet to find an example case of how to turn good to bad to > establish the baseline. > > Can anyone else shed some light? > > Regards, > - Robert > > On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 1:08 PM, Scott Granneman <[email protected]> wrote: >> That's pretty cool, Robert! Teach me, though - what's IRQ telling me? > > -- > Central West End Linux Users Group (via Google Groups) > Main page: http://www.cwelug.org > To post: [email protected] > To subscribe: [email protected] > To unsubscribe: [email protected] > More options: http://groups.google.com/group/cwelug -- Central West End Linux Users Group (via Google Groups) Main page: http://www.cwelug.org To post: [email protected] To subscribe: [email protected] To unsubscribe: [email protected] More options: http://groups.google.com/group/cwelug
